Re: [PATCH v2] vfio: add external user support
From: Alexey Kardashevskiy
Date: Thu Jun 27 2013 - 18:57:48 EST
On 06/28/2013 01:44 AM, Alex Williamson wrote:
> On Thu, 2013-06-27 at 17:14 +1000, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote:
>> VFIO is designed to be used via ioctls on file descriptors
>> returned by VFIO.
>>
>> However in some situations support for an external user is required.
>> The first user is KVM on PPC64 (SPAPR TCE protocol) which is going to
>> use the existing VFIO groups for exclusive access in real/virtual mode
>> in the host kernel to avoid passing map/unmap requests to the user
>> space which would made things pretty slow.
>>
>> The proposed protocol includes:
>>
>> 1. do normal VFIO init stuff such as opening a new container, attaching
>> group(s) to it, setting an IOMMU driver for a container. When IOMMU is
>> set for a container, all groups in it are considered ready to use by
>> an external user.
>>
>> 2. pass a fd of the group we want to accelerate to KVM. KVM calls
>> vfio_group_iommu_id_from_file() to verify if the group is initialized
>> and IOMMU is set for it. The current TCE IOMMU driver marks the whole
>> IOMMU table as busy when IOMMU is set for a container what this prevents
>> other DMA users from allocating from it so it is safe to pass the group
>> to the user space.
>>
>> 3. KVM increases the container users counter via
>> vfio_group_add_external_user(). This prevents the VFIO group from
>> being disposed prior to exiting KVM.
>>
>> 4. When KVM is finished and doing cleanup, it releases the group file
>> and decrements the container users counter. Everything gets released.
>>
>> 5. KVM also keeps the group file as otherwise its fd might have been
>> closed at the moment of KVM finish so vfio_group_del_external_user()
>> call will not be possible.
>
> This is the wrong order in my mind. An external user has no business
> checking or maintaining any state of a group until it calls
> add_external_user(). Only after that call is successful can the user
> assume the filep to group relationship is static and get the iommu_id.
> Any use of the "external user" API should start with "add" and end with
> "del".
Yes, this is what I actually do, just wrong commit message, will fix.
>
>> The "vfio: Limit group opens" patch is also required for the consistency.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Alexey Kardashevskiy <aik@xxxxxxxxx>
>> ---
>>
>> v1->v2: added definitions to vfio.h :)
>> Should not compile but compiled. Hm.
>>
>> ---
>> drivers/vfio/vfio.c | 54 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>> include/linux/vfio.h | 7 +++++++
>> 2 files changed, 61 insertions(+)
>>
>> diff --git a/drivers/vfio/vfio.c b/drivers/vfio/vfio.c
>> index c488da5..40875d2 100644
>> --- a/drivers/vfio/vfio.c
>> +++ b/drivers/vfio/vfio.c
>> @@ -1370,6 +1370,60 @@ static const struct file_operations vfio_device_fops = {
>> };
>>
>> /**
>> + * External user API, exported by symbols to be linked dynamically.
>> + */
>> +
>> +/* Allows an external user (for example, KVM) to lock an IOMMU group */
>> +int vfio_group_add_external_user(struct file *filep)
>> +{
>> + struct vfio_group *group = filep->private_data;
>> +
>> + if (filep->f_op != &vfio_group_fops)
>> + return -EINVAL;
>> +
>> + if (!atomic_inc_not_zero(&group->container_users))
>> + return -EINVAL;
>
> This is the place where I was suggesting we need tests to match
> get_device_fd. It's not clear what the external user is holding if the
> group has no iommu or is not viable here.
In my mind this test must include test for iommu id so I would merge it
with vfio_group_iommu_id_from_file(). Till I check iommu id, I still cannot
use this group so where to put check for iommu/viable does not really
matter (for me).
>
>
> if (!group->container->iommu_driver || !vfio_group_viable(group)) {
> vfio_group_try_dissolve_container(group);
> return -EINVAL;
> }
>
>> +
>> + return 0;
>> +}
>> +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(vfio_group_add_external_user);
>> +
>> +/* Allows an external user (for example, KVM) to unlock an IOMMU group */
>> +void vfio_group_del_external_user(struct file *filep)
>> +{
>> + struct vfio_group *group = filep->private_data;
>> +
>> + if (WARN_ON(filep->f_op != &vfio_group_fops))
>> + return;
>
> How about we make this return int so we can return 0/-EINVAL and the
> caller can decide the severity of the response?
And what can the caller possibly do on !0?
--
Alexey
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